Vitamin C deficiency in an Australian cohort of metropolitan surgical patients

Praveen Ravindran, Stephanie Wiltshire, Kamalakanta Das, Robert B. Wilson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Vitamin C is an essential micronutrient in the human diet. While large population studies measuring vitamin C have been performed in other countries, there are few studies of deficiency in the Australian population. This study aimed to quantify vitamin C deficiency, identify scorbutic symptoms and examine dietary associations in a cohort of preoperative general surgical patients. Vitamin C levels were determined in a cohort of patients referred to a single surgeon between January 2011 and December 2013. Baseline data were collected along with data on fruit consumption, weekly citrus fruit intake and presence of scorbutic symptoms. A total of 309 patients were included in the study and 21.4% of our cohort showed a vitamin C level ≤11.4 μmol/L (deficient). Mean citrus fruit intake was significantly higher in the normal vitamin C groups (>28.4 μmol/L) and patients with vitamin C levels ≤28.4 were more likely to consume no fruit (p=0.0004) which was also significant on multivariate analysis. Neither age nor gender appeared predictive of suboptimal vitamin C levels. No symptoms were significantly related to vitamin C levels on multivariate analysis. Vitamin C deficiency was common in Australian adults attending a surgical practice within south western Sydney. Review of the Australian recommended daily allowance for vitamin C is suggested, not only in clinically well patients but particularly in ICU and hospital inpatients. Larger studies examining the prevalence and impact of vitamin C deficiency in the Australian population are required to further investigate these findings.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)654-658
Number of pages5
JournalPathology
Volume50
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

Keywords

  • Australia
  • nutrition
  • scurvy
  • vitamin C deficiency

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